The Spread of the Greek Culture
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Transcript The Spread of the Greek Culture
Alexander the Great & the Spread of
Greek Culture
GROUP #5 PART TWO
AMY & MANDI
CONTENT STANDARDS : 6.4 #
4, 7, & 8
Macedonia
Land north of Greece
A warrior people, that admired Greek culture
By 400 B.C. were very powerful
Philip II
- Became king of
Macedonia in 359 B.C.E.
- His goal: to conquer
surrounding civilizations
and to build up his
empire to defeat Persian
Army.
-- Philip II assassinated in
336 B.C. and succeeded
by his son, Alexander.
Alexander the Great
Rising to Power
Militarily trained from
a young age
Commander of
Macedonian army at
age 16
Became king of
Macedonia at 20
City of Alexandria (Egypt)
Center of business & trade
The Conquests of Alexander
- 334 BC invaded Asia minor
- 333 BC freed Greek cities from Persians
- 332 BC captured Syria and Egypt
- 331 BC defeated Persians near Babylon
* after this victory, Alexander and his army
took the Persian army & their empire.
After conquering Persia,
Alexander led his army east to
India
Death at age 32
323 B.C. Alexander dies of
fever at age 32.
Four generals appointed,
fought for power.
Break of Alexander’s Empire
Empire divided into four regions:
- Macedonia, Pergamum, Egypt, and the
Seleucid Empire.
Greeks stayed in control of the different
regions, elected Greek officials.
by 241 B.C. the four regions became known as
Hellenistic Kingdoms.
Hellenistic Kings created new cities and
settlements – spreading Greek culture.
Hellenistic Era
- A time when the Greek
language and Greek ideas
were spread to non-Greek
peoples.
The Legacy of Alexander
Brave & courageous
Inspiring military leader
Largely responsible for the spreading of
Greek culture
Alexander: Villain or Hero?
VILLIAN
Destroyed Persepolis
HERO
Built new cities in place of
destroyed ones
Mistreated his slaves
Promoted learning
Had many of his advisors killed
Visited wounded after battles
The Spread of Greek Culture
The Dark Age (1100-750 BCE)
NEGATIVES
- Overseas trade slows = poverty
- Farmers producing little food
- The written language is not being taught, nor are
crafts
POSITIVES
- Poverty and famine forces Greeks to islands in
the Aegean Sea and west coast of Asia Minor
IMPROVING TRADE
- Greeks learn Phoenician alphabet
The Golden Age
(500-400 BCE)
● Ancient Greece flourished through art,
architecture, literature, and philosophy
● The Golden Age ended when Sparta
defeated Athens in the Peloponnesian War
(431-404 BCE)
● The Peloponnesian War bankrupted and
divided the people of Athens
Hellenistic(“like the Greeks”)
Era (323-30 BCE)
● Alexandria’s library held 500,000 scrolls
literature and language
● Philosophers, poets, writers, scientists, and
mathematicians move to Asia and Egypt
(primarily to Alexandria) to expand their
knowledge
● Scientists conducted research at the
museum in Alexandria
Literature
● Appolonius of Rhodes writes Argonautica
Jason and the Golden Fleece
● Theocritus (300-260 BCE) Poet
Wrote poems about how beautiful nature is. Was
the first poet to discuss the differences between
people that lived in the town and people that lived
in the country.
ART
● Greek sculptors are hired to fill the
streets with statues, baths, theatres, and
temples
● Kings and wealthy citizens paid for services
● Writers were also paid handsomely for
their literary works by kings and citizens
Philosophers
● Epicurus – Epicureanism – Happiness is the
goal of life. In order to be happy,
YOU MUST SEEK PLEASURE. Held class
in the “Garden”. He allowed slaves and
women to study philosophy. (341-271 BCE)
Epicurus – Epicureanism
ZENO (333-262 BCE)- Stoicism
- No emotions
- SEEK REASON
- Duty to serve the city
- He taught from a building called the “Painted
Stoa”. The Greek word for porch is “stoa”.
Zeno – Stoicism
Aristarchus – heliocentric
universe
● Aristarchus – Astronomer – The Sun is the
center of the universe.
Aristarchus
Eratosthenes – Astronomer
(276-195 BCE)
● Alexandria’s librarian. Used knowledge of
geometry and astrology to calculate the
distance around the Earth.
- Also made a relatively accurate calculation
from the Earth to the Sun and the Moon.
EUCLID – Mathematician
● Wrote Elements – plane geometry
information regarding how angles, faces, lines,
and points relate to one another
Archimedes
Archimedes of Syracuse,
Sicily (287-212 BCE)
● Scientist, physicist, engineer, and mathematician
studied tubes and cylinders
came up with the value of PI ()
● DESIGNED CATAPULTS
● Established the science of PHYSICS
explained the lever and compound pulley
● Killed in battle by Romans in 212 BCE
Catapult
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ransncjTr_c
HIPPARCHUS – Astrologer,
Astronomer, Mathematician,
and Geographer
● Founder of trigonometry
- Earth is the center of the universe
- Star catalog with names of stars, their
positions, and magnitudes
HIPPARCHUS
HYPATIA (350-370?-415 A.D.)
● FEMALE Astronomer, Mathematician, and
Philosopher
- She taught mathematics and philosophy at the
Platonist school in Alexandria.
- Invented the plane astrolabe, graduated brass
hydrometer, and hydroscope with Synesius of Greece
- Brutally murdered by monks
HYPATIA
Pythagoras (570-490 BCE)
● Mathematician – principles of geometry
Pythagorean theorem (sacrificed 300 oxen)
determining lengths of the sides of triangles
- Numerical aspects of musical harmony
believed that music had a healing power
- Led a strict way of life – diet, religious rituals,
and self discipline
PYTHAGORAS
Hippocrates (460-370 BCE)
● Hippocrates – “Father of Medicine”
Hippocratic Oath – still used today
- Physical factors create disease - not evil
spirits
- Keep proper balance between, “blood,
phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile.”
Symbol for Medicine
SYMBOL for MEDICINE and
HEALING
-The serpent represents
rejuvenation/healing
-The rod is that of the Greek
God Asclepius, son of Apollo
- Asclepius was a doctor in
Greek mythology
- The sick came to temples
to be assisted by priests
prior to Hippocrates
- Priests used herbs for
ailments, prayed for the sick,
and made sacrifices to the
Gods
- Hippocrates wanted a
separation between religion
and medicine
- Hippocrates worshiped
Asclepius